Man admitted harm to victim as part of AA program 2 decades after attack

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RICHMOND, Va. — A man who sexually assaulted a fellow University of Virginia student then apologized to her two decades later as part of the Alcoholics Anonymous program was released Thursday after serving less than six months of an 18-month sentence.

William Beebe, 42, of Las Vegas, pleaded guilty in November to aggravated sexual battery for attacking Liz Seccuro at a fraternity party in 1984. In March, a judge ordered a 10-year prison sentence with all but 18 months suspended.

Virginia abolished parole for all crimes committed after 1994, but because the crime occurred a decade earlier, Beebe was a candidate for early release.

“Having waited 20 years for justice this shortened sentence makes justice feel incomplete,” Seccuro wrote in an e-mail. “I take heart in the knowledge that the punishment for this crime is more certain today in Virginia.”

Apology part of AA programBeebe, sporting long hair and a goatee, left the Charlottesville jail without commenting to reporters. He plans to live in Chesterfield, Va.

In 2005, Beebe wrote Seccuro a letter of apology as part of AA’s 12-step recovery program. The ninth step calls on alcoholics to make amends to those they have harmed — unless doing so would cause further injury. In an exchange of e-mails that ensued, Beebe wrote: “I want to make clear that I’m not intentionally minimizing the fact of having raped you. I did.”

Seccuro, 40, of Greenwich, Conn., reported the assault to university officials back in 1984 but said a dean and the campus police treated her dismissively. After receiving Beebe’s letter, she eventually decided to call Charlottesville police. There is no statute of limitations on felonies in Virginia.

Beebe had originally been charged with rape and object sexual penetration and could have received life in prison. But last November, he pleaded guilty to a lesser charge as part of a plea deal after investigators uncovered information suggesting Seccuro was attacked by more than one person.

Victim launched group to help survivorsSeccuro was given a drink at the party that made her feel strange, and she later passed out, leaving her memory hazy. She said she vividly recalls being attacked by Beebe but always had a vague impression she’d been assaulted by additional members of the fraternity.

Authorities had hoped Beebe could assist them in their investigation, but prosecutors said he gave them no helpful information. In July, officials told The Associated Press they had exhausted all leads and the case had stalled.

Seccuro went public with her name and story, hoping to lead other sexual assault survivors to seek help. She launched STARS — Sisters Together Assisting Rape Survivors — to raise money for rape victims and their families.

Seccuro said she was concerned that Beebe’s shortened sentence will deter other sexual assault victims from contacting authorities.

“Please do come forward, find your voice, allow the system to work and be your own advocates,” she wrote. “Let this case be an example not of the failures of the system, but how we can make it better.”